Neptune is the eighth of the nine known planets in our solar
system. An enormous gas giant, it is about 17 times the mass of the Earth (and
58 times its volume). It poses many problems for those who wish to deny Creation.
Among other things, naturalistic theories say that Neptune shouldn’t exist!

At about 30 times as far away from the Sun as Earth, Neptune appears as little
more than a bluish dot in all but the most powerful telescopes. Our best photographs
and measurements of Neptune and its moons were taken by the Voyager II spacecraft,
which flew by the planet in August 1989. Many of these measurements greatly surprised
evolutionary scientists. They had assumed Neptune would be a cold, inactive place,
but it is not.

Neptune has winds that rage at almost 2,200
km/h (1,300 mph), the strongest measured in the solar system. Photograph 1 (p.
24) shows two large spots thought to have been enormous atmospheric storms, the
larger one approximately the same diameter as the Earth. In 1994, the Hubble Space
Telescope was pointed at Neptune, which revealed that these storms are now apparently
gone. However, a new one has appeared elsewhere on its surface. Neptune is a dynamic,
ever-changing place.

And Neptune is nowhere near as cold as
evolutionary theory predicts. Instead, it actually generates heat, radiating
into space over twice the energy it receives from the Sun. This fits the Creation
model very well, as a young Neptune could easily still be cooling off a few thousand
years after its creation. However, this does not fit the evolutionary/long-age
model, as many evolutionists have acknowledged.1
Overall, with its raging winds, dynamic atmosphere, and heat generation, Neptune
appears quite young.

The Voyager expedition measurements of
Neptune’s magnetic field also upset evolutionary theories. Three years earlier,
Voyager had flown by the planet Uranus, discovering that Uranus’s magnetic
field is tilted relative to the planet’s spin axis, and offset from the
planet’s centre. Both these characteristics contradict the evolutionary
“dynamo” model of planetary magnetism (this hypothetical “self-generating”
mechanism for sustaining a magnetic field is essential for long-agers, because
without some renewal such fields decay away to nothing in only a few thousand
years). So, evolutionists consoled themselves by speculating that perhaps “Voyager
had caught the field in the middle of a reversal (when the magnetic north and
south poles switch places).”2 This is very unlikely, but not necessarily impossible.
But then Voyager flew by Neptune and discovered that its field was tilted and
offset, too. Scientists were forced to concede that “it seems that the possibility
of finding two planets both experiencing magnetic polarity reversals is small.”3

Of course, creationists are not bound to dynamo theories,
nor to millions of years. Creationist astrophysicist Dr Russell Humphreys was
able to predict the magnetic characteristics of Uranus and Neptune (before Voyager
measured them) with much more success than the evolutionists, by assuming (based
on the Bible) that the planets began as masses of water (Genesis 1:2; 2 Peter 3:5) and that Creation occurred roughly 6,000 years ago.4

We know from the Bible that Neptune
was created on Day 4 along with the other “lights in the heavens”.
Evolutionary scientists (and “long-age creationists”) scoff at this
history, believing instead that the solar system formed from an enormous cloud
of gas and dust. Over postulated millions of years, the dust allegedly clumped
together into rocks, these rocks clumped together into bigger rocks, and eventually
there were enormous rocks (“planetesimals”) flying around, which stuck
together and became planets. The gas giants are supposed to have formed at the
outer reaches of the solar system because it was cold enough there for ice to
condense, making the growing planetoid massive enough to attract gas.

Unfortunately for evolutionists, Neptune doesn’t fit that model. An article
in a (pro-evolution) astronomy magazine explained it this way:

“Pssst … astronomers who model the formation of the solar system have
kept a dirty little secret: Uranus and Neptune don’t exist. Or at least
computer simulations have never explained how planets as big as the two gas giants
could form so far from the sun. Bodies orbited so slowly in the outer parts of
the sun’s protoplanetary disk that the slow process of gravitational accretion
would need more time than the age of the solar system to form bodies with 14.5
and 17.1 times the mass of Earth.”5

Triton,
Neptune’s primary moon, is a hostile place of volcanic activity and extreme
cold.

In evolutionary models, the farther you
are from the middle of the cloud (where the Sun is today), the longer the planet-formation
procedure requires. Neptune and Uranus are too far out to have formed according
to this process, even over the supposed 4.5-billion-year age given to the solar
system. One evolutionist astronomer wryly comments:

“What
is clear is that simple banging together of planetesimals to construct planets
takes too long in this remote outer part of the solar system. The time needed
exceeds the age of the solar system. We see Uranus and Neptune, but the modest
requirement that these planets exist has not been met by this model.”6

How much more time is needed? Another (evolutionary) book explains:

“There have been many attempts to model the evolution of a swarm of colliding
planetesimals … Safronov calculated the characteristic time-scales for planetary
growth. In the terrestrial region he found timescales of 107 [10,000,000]
years but the time estimates increased rapidly in the outer regions of the solar
system and was 1010 [10,000,000,000] years for Neptune—which
is twice the [alleged evolutionary] age of the solar system.

It
is clear that, in view of the large timescales found for the formation of the
outer planets, a satisfactory theoretical model for the accretion of planets from
diffuse material is not available at present.”7

A
plaque on the Voyager spacecraft, designed to accommodate evolutionary belief
by informing aliens about us.

So even if the
solar system really were 4.5 billion years old, as evolutionists believe, we would
still be 5.5 billion years short of the time necessary for Uranus and Neptune
to have formed by themselves.8 This
is why the Astronomy magazine said that, according to evolution, “Uranus
and Neptune don’t exist.”

Safronov published
these calculations in 1972. So, this problem has been recognized for at least
30 years. Why then do the textbooks and popular media so confidently proclaim
that we “know” for certain that the solar system formed by itself
over thousands of millions of years? Shouldn’t the fact that some of the
planets “don’t exist” cause some doubt?

Of course, creationists are not alone in noticing the absurdity of this situation.
Many evolutionists have been trying to come up with a solution. The Astronomy
article mentioned above continues as follows:

“…
Edward Thommes and Martin Duncan of Queens University in Ontario and Hal Levison
of the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado report a possible way to get around
the problem. Maybe Uranus and Neptune began forming closer to the sun, where there
was more material to make giant planets and timescales are much shorter … [the
article then describes their model, and how the planets migrated against the sun’s
gravity to their current positions, and quotes other scientists who explain why
it won’t work].

Neptune’s
great spot, a massive storm, which in the latest photographs has gone.

“It’s
clear that our level of sophistication of studying planet formation is relatively
primitive’, concedes Duncan. But he adds, ‘So far it’s been
very difficult for anybody to come up with a scenario that actually produces Uranus
and Neptune.”9

Here
we see the true heart of the matter. The ultimate goal of the evolutionist is
to “come up with a scenario” of how the universe formed by itself,
without a Creator. Sadly, they often seem to believe that the mere act of making
up such a story proves that it all actually happened that way. It doesn’t
even have to be a good story; in each issue of Creation we see the
wildly implausible scenarios that evolutionists have to accept in order to maintain
their belief system. Indeed, in this article we’ve seen that, instead of
acknowledging their Creator, evolutionists would rather cling to a story that
denies the very objects that it’s supposed to explain!

Ultimately, it really doesn’t matter if somebody eventually is able to “come
up with a scenario” about the formation of Neptune. Our outlook on life
should not depend on whether or not someone has been able to make up a good story.
For thousands of years, sinful man has been shaking his fist at God, and inventing
fables about how we all got here, without a Creator. Today, the stories are more
sophisticated, and often backed up with impressive-seeming computer simulations,
but it’s really the same thing as before.

The “gas
and dust” story is about as good as evolutionary models get—it’s
been around in various forms for hundreds of years,10
hundreds of very intelligent people have worked on various aspects of it, and
almost all evolutionary astronomers today believe it. Yet even though this “well-proven”
model pretends to explain the origin of the planets, it (embarrassingly enough)
still predicts that some of those planets can’t exist.

Why then would we want to put our faith in these sorts of fables, invented by
sinful man? Far better to place our faith in the living Word of God, the Bible.
Its historicity, accuracy and reliability are above reproach!

Footnotes

For more in depth on this topic, see TJ14(1):3–4, 2000, and TJ15(3):85–91, 2001.

See Humphreys,
R., Beyond Neptune:
Voyager II supports creation, Impact 203, 1990, and Humphreys,
R., The
Creation of Planetary Magnetic Fields, Creation Research Society Quarterly21(3):140–149, 1984. His published predictions in 1984 on the field
strength were 100,000 times greater than the evolutionary ones, and his article
said it would be a good test of his theory. The results were squarely in the
middle of Humphreys” prediction.

R.N.,
Birth of Uranus and Neptune, Astronomy28(4):30, 2000.

Taylor, S.R., Destiny or Chance: our solar
system and its place in the cosmos, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,
p. 73, 1998.

Actually,
the problem is even worse than it appears; we are not only lacking enough time
to form Neptune, but the planetesimals, etc. from which to build it aren’t
around any more. Notice that the models require that the planetesimals would
have dissipated long ago (to explain the lack of them today), but simultaneously
need them around for thousands of millions of years into the future, in order
to eventually build Neptune.

R.N.,
Birth of Uranus and Neptune, Astronomy28(4):30, 2000.

The
first nebular hypothesis is usually attributed to Pierre Laplace in 1796, although
Immanuel Kant had proposed a similar idea 40 years earlier. 20 years before that,
the mystic Emmanuel Swedenborg claimed he got a similar idea from a seance!